Facebook Sound Collection lets you add no-name music to videos

The right soundtrack can make a boring video interesting. So after years of reported discussions with the record labels, Facebook is launching video editing tool Sound Collection for inserting “songs, vocals, noises, and instrumental tracks spanning genres like hip hop, pop, jazz, country, and more” into Facebook and Instagram clips. What you can’t add is any music you’ve heard before. Sound Collection has huge potential, but lackluster execution, and probably won’t deter users from illegally adding popular music to their videos.

Sound Collection comes alongside a slew of other new resources for video makers following the launch of Facebook’s “Creator” app last month that caters to web influencers. They include new hub with educational materials related to 360 media production, a 360 camera loaner program, and a page featuring tools for 360 video editing. The goal with the launches is to help video creators build grow on Facebook, the company says.

Sounds Eclectic

With the Facebook Sound Collection, creators can access a free set of high-quality audio tracks and sound effects they can use in their videos on Facebook and Instagram, without having to worry with copyright or payment. That’s because Facebook has bought the rights off of composers and songwriters. Facebook says more tracks and effects will be added in the future as the collection grows. It seems a bit like the Vine Soundboard feature the now-defunct video app offered for pasting in sound effects.

Video creators using the service can also take advantage of new discovery tools that allow them to learn about the different artists, follow those they like, and browse the sounds by genre, mood, length and vocals. Some of the debut tracks includes those from artists like singer-songwriter Kiri Tse; Indian percussionist Jim Santi Owen; and guitarist and film composer Lyle Workman.

Those are far from 40 artists. The New York Times reported earlier this year that Facebook has been in talks with the major record labels since at least 2015. Right now, it’s forced to block or take down videos that it detects using popular copyrighted music. So if you slapped Dad’s favorite Bob Dylan song on that 60th birthday vacation montage you made in iMovie, it could get removed from Facebook. Facebook was hoping for a better solution.

Apparently it hasn’t reached such an agreement yet, as the current crop of artists aren’t well-known. Lyle Workman did an acoustic cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Fortunate Son” that he recorded for TV show Sons Of Anarchy. That’s about as close to popular as Sound Collection’s artists gets right now.

“This update begins to solve a problem I’ve heard from creators – they love making and sharing videos on Facebook and Instagram, but it can often be difficult to find audio or sounds to include” writes Facebook’s head of video Fidji Simo. Hopefully Facebook is serious about investing in Sound Collection and more features so you don’t have to turn to third-party editing apps or get slapped for copyright infringement.

Their Cameras, Your Content

Meanwhile, the new 360 Community page launching today is offering a suite of tools for those creating 360 degree videos for Facebook. Since launching back in 2015, Facebook says over a million 360 videos have been shared on its platform. But creating these videos has not been easy, because it requires special equipment, and a host of other challenges.

The page includes a variety of resources, like tutorials on topics like getting started with 360 cameras, 360 video editing workflows, and an introduction to spatial audio.

Facebook is launching 360 Director for Pages and profiles so they can add text and graphic annotations to videos, and guide where people should look with a default view that can move around as people watch if they don’t scroll themselves. It’s expanding Player Controls for choosing the zoom, direction, and preview thumbnail so user profiles can make these adjustments, not just Pages. And you can save drafts for later if you make changes before you upload.

Creators can borrow a ZCam S1 for free

The new Community page also aims to address problems by giving creators the ability to borrow 360 cameras from Blend Media for their upcoming projects and experiments. Initially, loaners include the GoPro Fusion and ZCam S1, and other cameras will be added in the coming months. It’s free for creators to borrow a camera, Facebook tells us, but the kicker is that it asks that some of the content you create with it get shared to Facebook.

Since 2012, YouTube has offered “YouTube Spaces” where creators can come use high quality equipment to shoot video for the platform. Facebook now lending out its own hardware is another sign that it truly does want to challenge YouTube, not just with random clips you stumble across in News Feed, but with premium content like its new Watch tab of original programming. But to attract the best creators, Facebook needs to prove it can pay out enough to earn their time. That’s still a work in progress.